





DJ Droood wrote:Heddwen wrote: However if an individual does not believe in (any) religion why the need for the stance at all? ...just being curious
I, personally, believe very strongly in religion...it is impossible to ignore or avoid the evidence of its existence. Especially this time of year. Just this morning, I did an awful two guitar version of "Silent Night", practising for the office Christmas party.
I just don't believe in the stated underlying premise of religion...the "Divine Being"...which would be a non-issue if His followers didn't take such an active interest in the way I live my life, and if their track record in civic affairs was less... horrific.....so I don't feel it serves Justice or Truth to remain indifferent.
In the narrow, immediate sense, we are posting in a thread called "The Atheist Druid", and examining the worldview of the atheist druid, so projecting a "stance" seems appropriate to the discussion..
Heddwen wrote:In what ways does this affect you?
It must take up a fair amount of time and energy vocalising all of this.





Heddwen wrote:DJ,I appreciate your responses to my (many) questions and just wanted to stress that I'm coming from a place of understanding. In the spirit of the diversityI'm sure you're work colleagues will enjoy your rendition of 'Silent Night'




DJ Droood wrote:I look at our very influential neighbours to the south who have school districts were "Creationism" and "Evolution" are given equal time,



wolf560 wrote:echoe wrote:yep, but I'm just wondering more about atheism. The atheists I've met completely dismiss all religions and all belief in God/s.
Being a former Atheist I can only give you my take on things...
I absolutely felt that the world had nothing in it beyond the science of reality and laws of physics. I proudly felt that if something happened it was my responsibility and all my fault, I felt that religion was the panacea of the masses and something that I did not feel was necessary for me to get by from day to day. Spirits, Deities, Magic, Ritual.... all of it was simply hogwash and unnecessary in my day=to=day life. Everything could be determined by a good sliderule and a set of equations.... how long a candle would burn to how may rotations a space capsule would make before it came back to earth based upon how much fuel the engines were fueled with.
I could not see it, touch it, quantify it... therefore it could not exist...
God disappeared in a puff of logic.....
Then I ran into a problem which I could not solve...
Someone asked me "What was there BEFORE the Big Bang?...and WHY?"
Science and Physics could answer everything up to the moment of detonation..... but one second earlier? What put everything in place? Chicken or Egg..... and beyond that, what put all of that into existence to begin with?
Shortly thereafter I had two visitations........ the first was my first Totem 'Shark' appearing (in this case a 22 foot Tiger Shark that should have by all accounts eaten me off the coast of the Philippine Islands). The second was a poltergiest that would not leave us alone for over six months in an old house we moved into.
That was 30 years ago and the world has never been the same since.
But without those three incidents?
I might still be the happy-go-lucky atheist everyone knew and loved back in the late 80's.
Arth Frown wrote:Cursuswalker has a idea that I'm anti athiest and/or anti atheist druidry. I think i have never said that I am. If I did that is not the case anymore. I was once a non-theist druid when i was first a druid about 12 years ago. Then was a polytheist druid followed by giving up the title of druid and became a Brython.
I really don't think it's my place to say if you are a atheist druid or whatever.
I hope that clears it up.
cursuswalker wrote:wolf560 wrote:Being a former Atheist I can only give you my take on things...
I absolutely felt that the world had nothing in it beyond the science of reality and laws of physics.
I could not see it, touch it, quantify it... therefore it could not exist...
God disappeared in a puff of logic.....
Then someone asked me "What was there BEFORE the Big Bang?...and WHY?"
Science and Physics could answer everything up to the moment of detonation..... but one second earlier?
The Big Bang is the earliest moment in time we can detect in this Universe. However that does not preclude this finite Universe existing in a larger Cosmos in which Universes, of all kinds, come and go, much as stars do in this one...In any case, deity just postpones the problem, rather than providing a solution to it.
If the what and why of our universe before the Big Bang was confusing to you.....then what about applying the same question to any deity that created it?
Why would the same questions not apply?



wolf560 wrote:The fact is, by empirical evidence and research, we still do not have a clue as to what existed before or how it got there.
Stephen Hawkings is trying to come up with an equation that explains "Life, the Universe, and Everything" but has not done so yet.
He has proved that 'unified string theory' and Einstein's theory of relativity can actually co-exist, something that until just recently was thought to be two separate ideologies.
cursuswalker wrote:Sorry, I had to come back on this. 'unified string theory' and Einstein's theory of relativity are NOT "ideologies". They are theories. The difference is crucially important in this discussion.
treegod wrote:cursuswalker wrote:Sorry, I had to come back on this. 'unified string theory' and Einstein's theory of relativity are NOT "ideologies". They are theories. The difference is crucially important in this discussion.
Yes, quite.
But if we're not careful they can easily become doctrines.




DJ Droood wrote:Perhaps when people "believe" in something that has been studied and tested...that has all the benchmarks of being "real"...it takes on the outward appearance (especially if you are steeped in "faith") of religious doctrine...if you like to dress up in pirate clothes, then you actually meet a pirate, you might mistakenly think the person is dressed up like a pirate, too.
cursuswalker wrote:How can something that relies on good quality evidence in order to be accepted become a doctrine? Moreover, something that can be ripped to shreds at any moment, even once accepted, if better evidence comes along that contradicts it?
My computer works according to the predictions of quantum theory. But once that theory no longer allows for further improvements to the technology why would we not abandon it for a better more refined theory? What precisely is this "doctrine" it could become and how would it operate at a cultural level?
treegod wrote:Also old paradigms can conflict with new. Often when one set of theories have become widely accepted they become very entrenched into people's (scientists') thinking. When new theories arise, even with good evidence, they can meet with some resisdence by the "old guard". It can take a new generation, educated with the new ideas to replace or update the old theories. Not in all cases, I'd hate to generalise this, but it can and does happen. But that reflects an aspect of human psychology more than the scientific method or even the scientific community as a whole.
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